I N H 



INGUL, in Ge6p-aphy, a river of Rufiia, which runs 

 uito the Bug, near Matvicvka. 



INGULETZ, a river of RufTia, wliich runs into the 

 Dnieper ; 12 miles N.E. of Chcrfon. 



INGULPHUS, in Biography, a monaftic hiHorian, was 

 the fon of a courtier of Edward the Confeflbr, and was born 

 at London about 1030. He purfned his matarer ftudies at 

 Weftminfter and Oxford, and diftinguilhed himfelf as a 

 great adept in the Peripatetic philofophy. Scarcely had he 

 attained the ii^e of manhood when he was appointed fecre- 

 tary to duke AViniani, by whofe pcrmiflion lie- vifited the 

 Holy Land and Conllantinople in 1064, and upon his return, 

 he entered into the order of the Benediftines at the abbey 

 of Fontenelle, in Normandy, of which he became prior. 

 When his patron, Wi'liam, obtained the crown of England, 

 Ingiilphus was created abbot of the rich monaftery of Croy- 

 land, which being in a dilapidated ftatc, he rebuilt, and for 

 which he obtained many privileges. He died in 1 109, leav- 

 ing beluRd him as evidences of his great learning, a work 

 on the life and miracles of St. Gnthlac, and a hiltory of the 

 monaftery of Croyland. The lall gives the author rank with 

 the Englilh hittorians. It was pubhlhed at London, by fir 

 Henry Saville, among the quinque fcriptorcs, in 1596, being 

 ahnoft five hundred years after the death of the author. It 

 has been ieveral times reprinted : the bell edition is that of 

 Oxford, ill 1684. 

 ' INGULSK, in Geography, a town of Ruffia, in the go- 

 vernment of Ekaterinoflav, on the Ingul ; 28 miles S. of 

 Elizavet. 



INGURTY, a town of Hindooftan, in the province of 

 Golconda ; 22 miles S.E. of Warangole. 



INGWEILER, a town of France, in the department 

 •of the Lower Rhine, on the Hotter ; 21 miles N.N.W. of 

 Strafburg. 



INHALER, in Surgery, a machine lately invented by 

 Mr. Mudge, and fo contrived, that the air drawn through a 

 tube in refpiration, pnfTes firft through hot water, and thus 

 comes to the lungs loaded with warm vapour. The fame 

 air, when expelled in expiration, pafles back through the 

 tube, and thence through a valve, when by proper manage, 

 ment it may be dillributed over the furface of the body and 

 thus aft as a vapour-bath. The author's dircQions for the 

 procefs are as follow • 



In the evening, a little before ied-time, the patient, if of 

 adult age, is to take three drams, or as many tea-fpoonfuls 

 of elixir paregoricum in a glafs of water : if the fubjeft is 

 younger, e. g. under five year5 old, one tea-fpoonful ; or 

 wiiliin that and tan years, two. About three quarters of an 

 hour after he fhould go to bed, and being covered warm, the 

 inhder, filled three parts with water nearly boiUng, and 

 wrapped up in a napkin, but fo that the valve in the cover 

 is not obftrufted by it, is to be placed at the arm-pit, and 

 the bed-cloaths being drawn up, and over it clofe to the 

 throat, the tube is to be applied to the mouth, and the 

 patient fliould infpire and expire through it about twenty 

 ininutes or half an hour. This, he allures us, is an infal- 

 lible and immediate cure for the cough confequent on catch- 

 ing cold. Mudge's radical and expeditious Cure for a 

 recent Catarrhous Cough, jy-S. 



INHALLOW, in Geography, one of the fmaller Ork- 

 ney idands, between Pomona and Roufa. 



INHAMBANE, or Innanbam, a kingdom of Africa, 

 in the country of Mocaranga, bounded N. by Sabia, E. and 

 S.E. by the Indian fea, S.W. by the river Manica, and 

 N.W. by an unknown country. 



INHAME, in Botany. See DiOSCOREA. 

 INHA.MOIT, jn Geography, a town and diOrift of 



I N H 



Africa, in the country of Mocaranga, fituated about S. ki. 

 17° 30'. E. long. 31^ 20'. 



INHAMPURA, a river of Africa, in the kingdom of 

 Iiihan.bane, which runs into the Indian fea, S. lat. 24° 30'. 

 INHANBANO, a river of Africa, which runs into the 

 Indian fea, S. lat. 23' 15'. , 



INHANGOMA, an ifland of Africa, in the river Zam. 

 beze. S. lat. 17" 4j'. E. long. 32' 20'. 



its'HAiraARA, a town of Nubin, in Sennaar ; 30 

 miles from Gieflen. 



INHAQUEA, a town of Africa, in the kingdom of 

 Sofala, polfefled by the Portuguefe, near the fca-coaft ; 20 

 miles S.W. of Sofala. 



INHARMONICAL Relation, in Muftc. Sec Rela- 

 tion, mharmonlcal. 



Inhaiimonical, is faid of an interval or chord that is im- 

 prafticable in harmony, and, confequenlly, in melody. Notes 

 out of tune are inharmonical. 



INHARMONIOUS, or unnatural relations, according 

 to Mr. John Holden (Eflay, p. 331.) are fuch intervals m 

 refult from the Turns of notes or intervals not contiguous in 

 the fcale, as a minor third to a major feventh, &c. 



INHASATO, in Geography, a fmall ifland in the Indian 

 fea, near the coaft of Africa. S. lat. 20'' 35'. 



INHERENCE, in Philofophy, is applied to the junaure 

 or connection of an accident with its fubllance. 



Thus quantity has a neceiTary inherence in a natural body. 

 INHERENT, in Naiural Hiflory, is a term ufed by 

 Mr. Willian, Margin lOuthiies, p. iSo.) to exprefs that clafs 

 of orgL^i ' liquia, v.hich ilick in the furface of 



the ma; I ..: extraneous foffils of veins are fre- 



quently t .ite. 



INHEi; [TABLE Blood, in Laiu. See Blood. 

 INHERIT.-XNCE , H.^ekepit.nSj aproperty in lands and 

 tenements to a man and his heirs. See Estate, in I,a'x\ 



Inheritance is not only underftood v.here a man hath in- 

 heritance of lands and tenements by defccnt or heritage ; but 

 every fee-fiinple or fee-tail, that a man hath by his purchafe, 

 may be faid to be an inheritance, becaiife his heirs may in- 

 herit it after him. (See YEE-fmp.'e and Fee Uil.) The 

 inheritances mentioned in our law are either corporeal or 

 incorporeal ; the corporeal relate to houfes, lands, &c. that 

 -may be touched or handled ; and the incorporeal are rights 

 ifTuing out of, annexed to, or exercifed with corporeal in- 

 heritances; as advowfons, tithes, annuities, offices, commons, 

 franchifes, &c. (See Hereditaments.) There is like- 

 wife another inheritance denominated feveral, that is, where 

 two or more hold lands feverally ; as when two perfons hold 

 to them and the heirs of their two bodii!s, in which cafe thefe 

 two have joint-eftate during their lives, but their heirs have 

 feveral inheritances. Goods and chattels cannot be turned 

 into an inheritance. For the rules of inheritance, fee Dr- 

 .SCENT, collateral. 



INHIBITION, a writ to inhibit or forbid a judge from 

 farther proceeding in a caufe depending before him. 



Sometimes prohibition and inhibition are put together, as 

 of the feme import ; but inhibition is moll commonly a writ 

 iffuing out of a higher court-chriftian to a lower ; and 

 prohibition out of the king's court to an inferior court. 



Iniiibitiox, in Scots t-anu, is a perfonal prohibition, 

 vhich pafTcs by letters under the fignet, prohibhing the 

 party inhibited to contraft any debt, or do any deed, bjr 

 which any part of his lands may be aliened or carried off in 

 prejudice of the creditor inhibiting. It muft be executed 

 againft the debtor, perfonally, or at his dwelling- iioufc, as 

 funimonfes, and afterwards pubhH-.ed and regiftcred in the 

 fame manner with interdiftions. Inhibition may procecdeithcr 



upoa 



